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Long-term expanding human airway organoids for disease modeling

Authors :
Egbert F. Smit
Maarten van der Linden
Emile E. Voest
Sander J. Tans
Fleur Weeber
Luc Teeven
Joep de Ligt
Linde Meyaard
Edwin Cuppen
G. Johan A. Offerhaus
Johanna F. Dekkers
Norman Sachs
Peter J. Peters
Sylvia F. Boj
Gimano D. Amatngalim
Domenique D. Zomer-van Ommen
Emilio Ramos
Matthijs F.M. van Oosterhout
Alexander van Oudenaarden
Coline H.M. van Moorsel
Robert G.J. Vries
Marco C. Viveen
Eduardo P. Olimpio
Natalie Proost
Arne Van Hoeck
Anne C. Rios
Dominique J Wiener
Krijn K. Dijkstra
Frank E. J. Coenjaerts
Guizela Huelsz-Prince
Lena Böttinger
Harry Begthel
Marieke van de Ven
Jos Jonkers
Jeroen Korving
Sepideh Derakhshan
Sridevi Jaksani
Anna Lyubimova
Louis Bont
Cornelis K. van der Ent
Angelos Papaspyropoulos
Jeroen S. van Zon
Nino Iakobachvili
Hans Clevers
Dymph Klay
Inha Heo
Kuldeep Kumawat
Jeffrey M. Beekman
Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research
Institute of Nanoscopy (IoN)
RS: M4I - Nanoscopy
Source :
EMBO Journal, 38(4). Nature Publishing Group, The Embo Journal, 38(4):100300. Wiley
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Organoids are self-organizing 3D structures grown from stem cells that recapitulate essential aspects of organ structure and function. Here, we describe a method to establish long-term-expanding human airway organoids from broncho-alveolar resections or lavage material. The pseudostratified airway organoids consist of basal cells, functional multi-ciliated cells, mucus-producing secretory cells, and CC10-secreting club cells. Airway organoids derived from cystic fibrosis (CF) patients allow assessment of CFTR function in an organoid swelling assay. Organoids established from lung cancer resections and metastasis biopsies retain tumor histopathology as well as cancer gene mutations and are amenable to drug screening. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection recapitulates central disease features, dramatically increases organoid cell motility via the non-structural viral NS2 protein, and preferentially recruits neutrophils upon co-culturing. We conclude that human airway organoids represent versatile models for the in vitro study of hereditary, malignant, and infectious pulmonary disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14602075 and 02614189
Volume :
38
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Embo Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bdac496a458b164f9758fa00a4e249eb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.2018100300